Madras High Court orders inquiry into report that convicts are used for household work in residences of prison officials
The Hindu
Madras High Court orders inquiry into convict prisoners forced to do household work, beaten by prison officials.
Shocked to hear from a Chief Judicial Magistrate (CJM) about convicted prisoners being forced to do household work in the residences of prison officials and beaten up black and blue when valuables go missing, the Madras High Court on Thursday ordered an inquiry into the issue.
A Division Bench of Justices S.M. Subramaniam and V. Sivagnanam directed the High Court’s Registrar General to furnish a copy of the CJM’s report, in a sealed cover, to the Director General of Prisons and Correctional Services for initiating departmental action agains the erring officials.
After ordering the R-G to share a copy of the CJM’s report with the Superintendent of Police, Crime Branch-Criminal Investigation Department too, the Bench directed the latter to register a criminal case against all the offenders and report progress to the court on September 20.
The interim orders were passed on a writ petition filed by 53-year-old S. Kalavathi of Krishnagiri district. Her counsel P. Pugalenthi told the court that the petitioner’s son S. Sivakumar had been convicted for life in a murder case and lodged at the Vellore central prison for the last 10 years.
In the last week of May, she came to know about her son having been assaulted brutally by the prison warders and kept in solitary confinement after suspecting him to have stolen ₹4.5 lakh in cash apart from gold and silver jewellery from the residence of a Deputy Inspector General of Prisons.
Though she made frantic efforts to meet him in the prison, the officials denied permission for an interview, the counsel said and insisted on issuing a direction to the prison authorities to provide necessary medical attention to the convict besides transferring him to the central prison at Salem.
Since the allegations against the prison officials were serious, the Division Bench had on August 9 directed the Vellore CJM to meet the convict in the prison, record his statement and file a detailed report before the court. Accordingly, the CJM filed his report before the court on Thursday.